Towards softerware: Enabling personalization of interactive data representations for users with disabilities

Frank Elavsky, Marita Vindedal, Ted Gies, Patrick Carrington, Dominik Moritz, Øystein Moseng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Accessible design for some may still produce barriers for others. This tension, called access friction, creates challenges for both designers and end-users with disabilities. To address this, we present the concept of softerware, a system design approach that provides end users with agency to meaningfully customize and adapt interfaces to their needs. To apply softerware to visualization, we assembled 195 data visualization customization options centered on the barriers we expect users with disabilities will experience. We built a prototype that applies a subset of these options and interviewed practitioners for feedback. Lastly, we conducted a design probe study with blind and low vision accessibility professionals to learn more about their challenges and visions for softerware. We observed access frictions between our participant’s designs and they expressed that for softerware’s success, current and future systems must be designed with accessible defaults, interoperability, persistence, and respect for a user’s perceived effort-to-outcome ratio.

Original languageEnglish
JournalIEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

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